What's hot


Vanderwyk & Burnham

Book (Vanderwyk & Burnham)
List Price: $16.95
Price: $15.92
You Save: $1.03 (6%)



Constable

eBooks (Constable)
List Price: $6.99




TV Series Episode Video on Demand
Price: $1.99





Grocery
List Price: $33.03
Price: $25.46
You Save: $7.57 (23%)

  • Pack of 2, 24-count boxes (total of 48 counts)
  • Brewing occurs inside the K-Cup so no flavor residue is left behind to spoil the next cup.
  • Sweet, full-bodied all-American classic coffee


Fisher Price

Toy (Fisher Price)
List Price: $24.99
Price: $22.99
You Save: $2.00 (8%)

  • Part of the World of Little People System
  • Includes plane and 3 Little People figures: Mia, Roberto, and a pilot
  • Little People figures wiggle and wobble as kids spin the wheel, and the easy-carry handle helps pretend flights soar


unamerican activities

Automotive Parts and Accessories (unamerican activities)
Price: $1.49


  • Vinyl Sticker
  • In Stock
  • 8.5x1

old people FAQ


There will be 'old' as in poor unable to afford the surgeries avaible to defy aging and the 'eternally young,' those who can afford a new body part, a skin transplant, etc - - - you'll be in a singles bar gloming on a hot chick and be amazed at her knowledge


Well if you based your observatons from the old people of today, it will be incredibly different. Remember, the old guys of today survived a war, their main reason for their lack of fashion sense and humor.


hahah, ewwwwwwww


hehehe sucks 4 him!


they are so cutee. like every single one of them is adorable!

old people news

We simply can't afford to pay for our old age

18.05.12

Long-term projections for what will happen if nothing is done are alarming. In a report published last summer, the Office for Budget Responsibility said that age-related spending, particularly on healthcare (the vast bulk of an individual’s medical costs occur in the final years of life) and pensions, will start to increase very significantly from the mid 2020s.

Tax revenues, by contrast, will not be growing to match. The upshot is that by the middle of the next decade, national debt will again be on a strongly rising trend, reaching some 107 per cent of GDP by 2060, and then continuing upwards. Long-term projections such as these need to be treated with caution. It might not happen. A killer flu epidemic might come along which disproportionately affects the elderly. Or immigration might fill the gap in the workforce, returning the dependency ratio to more familiar levels.

All the same, you need little by way of expertise in economic modelling to know that the OBR must be broadly right. If anything, given the quite optimistic assumptions it uses on productivity growth, it probably understates the severity of the problem. The present panoply of government services and benefits was set up for an entirely different demographic. It is unsustainable on the one we are moving into.


Source: Telegraph.co.uk